I help solo developers work like a team.
Building AI tools that multiply what one person can ship.
I'm a self-taught software engineer from Buenos Aires.
No bootcamp. No university. My grandfather taught me that you can't understand something until you've taken it apart — so I took everything apart.
I started with HTML in 2021. First clients in 2022. First real apps in 2023. By 2024 I was building a full SaaS from scratch, alone.
Then AI arrived and changed the game entirely.
Most devs using AI have one machine, one context, one agent at a time.
I had four machines sitting there — a Mac Mini M4 Pro, two high-end PCs, a laptop. And I kept thinking: what if Tony Stark didn't just have one JARVIS instance? What if all of them worked in parallel?
That's what I built.
ATLAS (Mac Mini M4 Pro) ──────── orchestrator
├── NOVA (i5 + RTX 3060, Windows) ── backend agent
├── PIXEL (Ryzen 7 + RTX 3070, Linux) ── frontend agent
└── NOMAD (Ryzen 7, mobile) ── backup / overflow
Four machines. Two Claude accounts. Real-time coordination via SSH + Tailscale. Parallel agents that actually sync between rounds.
No API costs. No cloud dependency. 100% yours.
→ JARVIS — jarvis-490206.web.app/es
The companies don't want self-taught developers. I know because I've sent the applications.
There are thousands of skilled devs locked out of the market — not because they can't build, but because they don't have the right credentials on paper.
JARVIS is my answer to that. If you can't get hired by a team, become the team. The tools exist. You just need to know how to wire them together.
Everything I learned building this is open source.
LocalCenter — A business management SaaS for Argentine companies. AFIP integration, SQL Server, Angular. Full stack, end to end, solo. The kind of project that teaches you what no tutorial ever will.
| Area | Technologies |
|---|---|
| Backend | Node.js TypeScript SQL Server |
| Frontend | Angular 17 Svelte 5 Tailwind |
| Desktop | Tauri 2 Rust |
| AI | Claude Code multi-agent orchestration |
| Infra | SSH Tailscale Linux Windows macOS |
2021 → First HTML/CSS/JS. Learning by breaking things.
2022 → First clients. Real deadlines. Real pressure.
2023 → TypeScript, databases. First apps people actually used.
2024 → Full stack SaaS. Building LocalCenter from scratch.
2025 → Claude Code. AI changes how I work. Forever.
2026 → Rust. JARVIS. 4 machines. 1 developer. Team output.
I don't start with the stack. I start with the problem.
The stack is a consequence — it adapts to what needs to be built and how fast it needs to exist. I'm not less technical because of this. I'm technical with direction. There's a difference between knowing every API by heart and knowing exactly what to build and why.
With AI, the ceiling for solo developers got a lot higher. But what actually separates people isn't who knows more syntax — it's who can look at a real need, design the right solution, and make it exist. That's closer to an architect than a coder.
No barriers. No "I don't know that language." Just: what needs to exist, and how do I make it exist?
- A solo developer with good tools can out-ship a team with bad ones
- Self-taught isn't a limitation — it's a different kind of education
- The best way to learn something is to build something people actually use
- AI doesn't replace developers. It multiplies the ones who know how to use it.
"The developers who learn to work in fleets are going to win."
Buenos Aires, Argentina 🇦🇷



